(Press-News.org) Key Takeaways
UCLA researchers have developed a CAR-NKT cell therapy that has shown to be more effective at fighting endometrial cancer than current immunotherapies in experimental models.
While personalized treatments can cost six figures and require weeks to manufacture, this therapy can be mass-produced and stored ready-to-use at about $5,000 per dose.
With all preclinical studies now complete, the team is preparing to submit applications to the Food and Drug Administration to begin clinical trials.
Endometrial cancer is the most common gynecologic cancer in the United States and is one of the few cancers in which survival rates have steadily declined over the last few decades. The most aggressive subtypes are a significant driver of that trend: uterine papillary serous carcinoma accounts for just 10% of diagnoses but nearly 40% of deaths.
Now, UCLA researchers have developed a novel immunotherapy that could begin to change the calculus for a disease that has resisted treatment progress. In a study published in Experimental Hematology & Oncology, the team describes how CAR-NKT cell therapy is more effective than current immunotherapies at fighting endometrial cancer.
“Across all forms of endometrial cancer, recurrence remains one of the greatest challenges — and it’s especially frequent and devastating in aggressive subtypes,” said gynecologic oncologist Dr. Sanaz Memarzadeh, a co-senior author and a member of the Eli and Edythe Broad Center of Regenerative Medicine and Stem Cell Research at UCLA. “Patients often discover the cancer has returned after undergoing a combination of surgery, chemotherapy and radiation, so it’s crucial that we devise and test new therapeutic strategies that can help save women’s lives.”
While current personalized immunotherapies can cost hundreds of thousands of dollars and take weeks to manufacture, the new therapy sidesteps both problems, using an off-the-shelf production platform designed to make treatment more accessible and affordable.
How CAR-NKT cells strike cancer on multiple fronts — safely and precisely
The therapy centers on a rare but powerful type of immune cell called invariant natural killer T cells, or NKT cells. When equipped with a chimeric antigen receptor, or CAR, targeting mesothelin — a protein found on endometrial cancer cells — these engineered cells can precisely detect and destroy tumors through three pathways simultaneously, unlike conventional CAR-T cell therapies, which rely on a single recognition mechanism.
Dr. Lili Yang and Dr. Sanaz Memarzadeh have developed an immunotherapy that has achieved complete tumor elimination in mouse models of endometrial cancer. | Credit: Elena Zhukova/UCLA Broad Stem Cell Research Center
“This cancer is remarkably good at escaping treatment, but it can’t escape multiple attack pathways at once,” said co-senior author Dr. Lili Yang, a professor of microbiology, immunology and molecular genetics and a member of the UCLA Broad Stem Cell Research Center. “By the time it adapts to one threat, our therapy has already hit it from another angle.”
The most striking results came from mouse models of endometrial cancer: The therapy achieved complete tumor elimination and prolonged survival, while conventional CAR-T cells used as a comparison provided only partial, temporary control before tumors returned.
Broader testing across patient tumor samples and patient-derived tumor cell lines confirmed the therapy’s superior cancer-killing ability in aggressive endometrial cancer subtypes such as uterine papillary serous carcinoma.
Crucially, the CAR-NKT cells showed no safety concerns. They didn’t trigger graft-versus-host disease, a dangerous condition in which donated immune cells attack healthy tissues.
A therapy that’s ready when patients need it
Current personalized immunotherapies require collecting a patient’s own immune cells, shipping them to a specialized facility for genetic modification and returning them to the patient — a process that can take several weeks and cost well into the six figures.
The UCLA platform addresses both barriers. CAR-NKT cells are produced from donated blood stem cells in a scalable process, and because NKT cells are naturally compatible with any immune system, a single donation can yield enough cells for thousands of treatments.
“The idea is to pre-make the product, cryopreserve it and have it ready to go as soon as the patient needs the therapy,” said Yang, who is also a member of the UCLA Health Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center.
One product to tackle breast, ovarian, endometrial, lung and pancreatic cancers
One of the most consequential features of the therapy is its versatility. Because mesothelin is expressed not only in endometrial cancer but also in ovarian, breast, pancreatic and lung cancers, the same manufactured product could be used to fight a wide range of tumors.
“This is a platform technology,” said co-first author Dr. Yanruide (Charlie) Li, a postdoctoral scholar in the UCLA Broad Stem Cell Research Center Training Program. “The goal is one product that doesn’t require patient-by-patient customization.”
With all preclinical studies now complete, the team is preparing to submit applications to the Food and Drug Administration to begin clinical trials.
“Despite its prevalence, endometrial cancer remains understudied,” Memarzadeh said. “Research efforts and funding is how that changes. It’s what allows us to ask important questions, develop innovative therapies and ultimately get them to the patients who need them.”
Additional authors include Gabriella DiBernardo, Yuning Chen, Xinyuan Shen, Ryan Hon, Lauryn Ruegg, Jie Huang, Adam Neal and Neda Moatamed.
The therapeutic approach described in this study has been used in preclinical tests only; it has not been tested in humans in clinical trials or approved by the FDA as safe and effective for use in humans.
Notes
The research was supported by the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine, the Department of Defense, the UCLA Broad Stem Cell Research Center, the Wendy Ablon Trust, the Department of Veterans Affairs, the Parker Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy, UCLA’s department of microbiology, immunology and molecular genetics, the UCLA Office of the Chancellor and the UCLA Goodman-Luskin Microbiome Center.
END
Universal, ready-to-use immunotherapy detects and destroys endometrial cancer
CAR-NKT cell therapy can be produced at a fraction of the cost of personalized treatments
2026-03-16
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
New $1.9 million grant lets Montana State team deepen understanding of avian flu
2026-03-16
BOZEMAN – With the support of a recent federal grant, a team of Montana State University microbiologists will spend the next three years expanding and deepening research into one of the world’s most damaging agricultural viruses, capitalizing on cutting-edge facilities and technologies housed at the university.
Assistant professor Emma Loveday of the College of Agriculture’s Department of Microbiology and Cell Biology is the lead investigator on a $1.9 million grant awarded by the U.S. Department of Agriculture to study HPAI, or highly pathogenic avian influenza, more commonly known as “bird flu.” ...
Storytelling may hold key to building memory
2026-03-16
New research from the University of Mississippi suggests that telling stories – from ancient campfire tales to modern-day digital communication – may be tied to how human memory evolved.
It also could be a key to improving everyday retention.
Matthew Reysen, associate professor of psychology, and Ole Miss doctoral student Zoe Fischer recently put storytelling to the test. Their study, published in Evolutionary Psychology, found that storytelling performs just as well, and sometimes better, than the current gold standard ...
Pharmacy team develops 3D-printed bandage to help heal chronic wounds
2026-03-16
A team of University of Mississippi researchers is developing a way to use 3D printed medicated patches to help close persistent sores and ulcers.
The researchers in the School of Pharmacy have created a customizable wound scaffold that delivers natural, biodegradable antibacterials over time to encourage healing. Researchers Michael Repka, distinguished professor of pharmaceutics and drug delivery; Sateesh Vemula, postdoctoral researcher; and doctoral candidate Nouf Alshammari published their results in the European Journal of Pharmaceutics and Biopharmaceutics.
"People ...
Cannibalism takes major bite out of young blue crabs, but the shallows offer a refuge
2026-03-16
The Chesapeake Bay’s most popular crustacean has a dark streak. Cannibalism is the No. 1 killer of juvenile blue crabs in mid-salinity waters where they are known to congregate, according to a new study from the Smithsonian Environmental Research Center (SERC) published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Science. But shallow waters can offer a vital refuge.
Blue crabs lead a life on the run. After spending roughly two months as larvae in the ocean, they are swept back into the lower bay to morph into juvenile crabs. There, the juveniles rely on seagrass to provide partial refuge from predatory fish like striped bass. ...
Groundbreaking PKU innovation can detect disease from a drop of blood
2026-03-16
Peking University, Mar 16, 2026: An innovative platform developed by PKU researchers called "cf-EpiTracing" has proved capable of detecting and tracing diseases from as little as 50 μl of human plasma, or roughly a drop of blood. The research, published in Nature on March 4, 2026, was led by Professor He Aibin from the College of Future Technology and Professor Jing Hongmei from the Department of Hematology, PKU Third Hospital.
Why it matters
Current liquid biopsies (a type of blood test) struggle to pinpoint where disease signals originate, limiting their use. ...
Differences in brain activity between ADHD and neurotypical adults
2026-03-16
New from JNeurosci, Elaine Pinggal, from Monash University, and colleagues assessed how sleep-like brain activity in awake adults influences sustained attention during a task.
The researchers compared sleep-like brain activity from 32 medication-withdrawn adults with ADHD to 31 neurotypical adults as participants performed a task requiring sustained attention. The ADHD group had more sleep-like brain activity, which was associated with more lapses in attention. Further analyses revealed that this activity may drive the relationship between ADHD and attention ...
How do people quickly respond to scary sounds?
2026-03-16
Preclinical studies on animals have identified brain pathways that drive quick, protective fear responses to “scary” sounds. New from JNeurosci, Emmanouela Kosteletou-Kassotaki and colleagues, from the University of Barcelona, expand on this work by exploring whether humans also have a brain pathway enabling quick fear responses to certain sounds.
Using publicly accessible data from the Human Connectome Project, the researchers examined ...
Coastal ocean chemistry now substantially shaped by humans
2026-03-16
RIVERSIDE, Calif. -- A global analysis of more than 2,300 seawater samples from more than 20 field studies around the globe indicates that human-made chemicals make up a significant portion of organic matter in coastal oceans.
The international study, led by biochemists Jarmo Kalinski and Daniel Petras at the University of California, Riverside, analyzed seawater samples collected over a decade from coastal regions from the Pacific, Atlantic, and Indian Oceans. Reported in Nature Geoscience, the findings show that ...
Brain computer interface enables rapid communication for two people with paralysis
2026-03-16
Loss of communication can be among the most devastating symptoms for patients with paralysis. A new study by investigators from Mass General Brigham Neuroscience Institute and Brown University describes an investigational implantable brain computer interface (iBCI) typing neuroprosthesis that can restore communication with speed and accuracy. The tool, which utilizes the QWERTY keyboard and attempted finger movements, performed well in two BrainGate clinical trial participants—one with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and the other with a cervical spinal cord injury. Their results are published ...
Computational model measures key aging metric from routine biopsies
2026-03-16
A new computational tool infers changes occurring at the ends of the chromosomes housing our DNA. It does so by detecting structural alterations in cells and tissues captured in images taken of routine medical biopsies, according to findings published March 16, 2026, in Cell Reports Methods.
Scientists at Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute developed the TLPath model based on the hypothesis that modifications in the shape and structure of cells and tissues could be used to predict the length of repeating sections of DNA called ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Half of Native Hawaiian University of Hawaiʻi students experience period poverty, study reveals
American College of Cardiology to host New Orleans Community Health Fair
UMass Amherst research links early adult drinking to middle age cognitive decline
Early life stress linked to long-lasting digestive issues
A built-in warning system: How mosquitoes detect a common compound in plant-based mosquito repellent
Rice hosts first-of-its-kind workshop exploring how AI can accelerate discoveries in major neutrino experiment
Researchers combine flavor and nutritional value in Amazonian chocolate
Study identifies causes of potato dry rot in Colorado
Universal, ready-to-use immunotherapy detects and destroys endometrial cancer
New $1.9 million grant lets Montana State team deepen understanding of avian flu
Storytelling may hold key to building memory
Pharmacy team develops 3D-printed bandage to help heal chronic wounds
Cannibalism takes major bite out of young blue crabs, but the shallows offer a refuge
Groundbreaking PKU innovation can detect disease from a drop of blood
Differences in brain activity between ADHD and neurotypical adults
How do people quickly respond to scary sounds?
Coastal ocean chemistry now substantially shaped by humans
Brain computer interface enables rapid communication for two people with paralysis
Computational model measures key aging metric from routine biopsies
Geographic, racial, and sex disparities in time to treatment for early-onset colorectal cancer
Long-term trends in pediatric self-injury in high-income countries
Experimental therapy shows safety and signals of clinical benefit in ALS
Holding vs continuing GLP-1/GIP agonists before upper endoscopy
Clinical trial results support use of weekly extended-release buprenorphine for treatment of opioid use disorder during pregnancy
AI expert and industry-leading toxicologist Thomas Hartung hails launch of agentic AI platform, ToxIndex, as a “transformative moment” in chemical safety science
New genetic risk score better predicts diabetes, obesity and downstream complications
Novel high-entropy strategy boosts energy storage and enables ultrafast discharge in advanced ceramics
From trial-and-error to intelligent design: Machine Learning boosts a breakthrough in the performance of BaTiO3-based High-Entropy energy-storage ceramics
Traditional Chinese medicine in febrile neutropenia treatment: advances and prospects
Novel tantalate high-entropy ceramics coatings achieve breakthrough thermal barrier performance at 1500 °C
[Press-News.org] Universal, ready-to-use immunotherapy detects and destroys endometrial cancerCAR-NKT cell therapy can be produced at a fraction of the cost of personalized treatments